White House issues cybersecurity plan as GOP calls for restraint

Jul. 18—The 69-step plan from the White House to implement its broad cybersecurity strategy assigns more than a dozen federal agencies specific deadlines with the goal of protecting the nation through aggressive regulation.

The implementation plan, announced late last week by acting National Cyber Director Kemba Walden, spells out how the White House National Cybersecurity Strategy released in March would be carried out to protect critical infrastructure like water and power plants.

That strategy calls for large public and private sector entities to take on a greater responsibility to reduce risks, while offering incentives to boost investment in long-term cybersecurity measures.

Publishing the step-by-step implementation plan is intended to "ensure accountability," Walden said at an event hosted by ITI, a technology trade group. It is also intended to ensure that the "federal government, one of the more capable actors in the cyber ecosystem, is practicing what we preach," she said. The plan will be updated annually based on feedback from agencies and companies, Walden said.

Key House Republicans were generally supportive of the goal, but raised concerns the plan would impose more burdens on private companies that operate critical infrastructure facilities.

"We remain steadfast in our belief that the Biden administration must streamline existing regulations while working with the private sector to identify new opportunities for partnership rather than punishment," Reps. Mark E. Green, R-Tenn., and Andrew Garbarino, R-N.Y., said in a statement.

Green is chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, and Garbarino is chairman of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Protection Subcommittee.

"Implementation of this strategy must be a collaborative process that aims to ease regulatory burden while maintaining strong cybersecurity practices," they said. "We intend to exercise strict oversight on CISA's efforts as the responsible agency for at least 10 initiatives and a contributing entity to at least 19 initiatives, as it continues to execute its federal cybersecurity and critical infrastructure resilience mission," they said, referring to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.

The plan calls for the Office of the National Cyber Director and the Office of Management and Budget to work with federal agencies to develop, by the end of December, a uniform set of regulations for operators of critical infrastructure facilities.

The Department of Homeland Security identifies 16 sectors as critical, including chemical, water, and waste processing plants; financial services; health care facilities; and utilities operated by private companies.